Lebanon PM Saad Hariri confirms resignation

Update 2.49pm: Lebanon's prime minister Saad Hariri has said he is returning to the country and confirmed he is resigning amid political tensions.

He told reporters in Paris: "As you know I have resigned and we will speak about this matter there (Lebanon)."

Mr Hariri, who flew to France from Saudi Arabia, where he first made his shock resignation announcement, said he will go back to Lebanon in the coming days to take part in Independence Day celebrations.

Update 10am: Lebanon's Prime Minister Saad Hariri has arrived in France from Riyadh, seeking to dismiss fears that he had been held against his will and forced to resign by Saudi authorities.

Mr Hariri is scheduled to meet French president Emmanuel Macron, who is trying to mediate in the region to avert a proxy conflict in Lebanon between Iranian-backed and Saudi-backed camps.

An Associated Press journalist saw Mr Hariri emerge from a convoy that arrived on Saturday morning at his Paris residence, where police stood guard.

Mr Hariri walked out of his car and moved straight into the building without speaking to journalists.

Lebanese television showed the prime minister accompanied by his wife Lara al-Azm, but none of his three children appeared.

Before leaving Riyadh, Mr Hariri dismissed as "rumours" reports about his alleged detention in the kingdom.

In a tweet, he insisted his stay in Saudi Arabia was to consult with officials there on the future of Lebanon and its relations with its Arab neighbours.

Earlier: Saad Hariri has left Saudi Arabia for France, two weeks after declaring his resignation from the kingdom and sparking speculation that he was forced to do so.

The surprise resignation announcement by Mr Hariri on November 4 plunged his country into turmoil and stunned the Lebanese, many of whom saw it as a sign the Sunni kingdom - the prime minister's chief ally - had decided to drag tiny Lebanon into its feud with the region's other powerhouse, the predominantly Shiite Iran. Lebanon still has not recognised his resignation.

In his televised announcement, Mr Hariri cited Iran and Hezbollah for meddling in Arab countries, particularly Saudi Arabia. He also said he was afraid for his life.

Shortly before he left Riyadh, Saudi Arabia asked its citizens for the second time in less than two weeks to leave Lebanon "as soon as possible" given the "circumstances" there.

Less than a week after Mr Hariri resigned, Riyadh ordered its nationals to leave immediately, raising fears of more punitive actions to come amid sharp criticism from Saudi officials of Hezbollah, Iran's ally in Lebanon.

The announcement early on Saturday was posted on the Saudi embassy Twitter account. It came shortly after the embassy reported that it is closely following reports of an attack on two Saudi nationals in a Beirut neighbourhood. There was no immediate security report of the incident. Mr Hariri tweeted before he left Saudi Arabia that any attack on a Saudi is an attack on him personally.

Mr Hariri, a dual Lebanese-Saudi national, stunned Lebanon and the region when he declared his resignation from Saudi Arabia, sparking speculations he was held against his will and forced to resign.

In a series of tweets before leaving, Mr Hariri dismissed as "rumours" and a "lie" reports that he was detained or prevented from leaving the kingdom. In a rare English tweet, Mr Hariri named German foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel when announcing that he was heading to the airport in Saudi Arabia. He apparently singled out the top German diplomat because he had criticised meddling in Lebanon's affairs.

"To say that I am held up in Saudi Arabia and not allowed to leave the country is a lie," Mr Hariri said. "I am on the way to the airport Mr. Sigmar Gabriel."

Before heading to the airport, Mr Hariri met with the Saudi Crown Prince and other senior officials, according to a member of Mr Hariri's political party and two Lebanese television stations.

He is expected to arrive in Paris on Saturday morning. Local Lebanese TV said he left Riyadh with his wife. His family had lived in Riyadh for years.

French president Emmanuel Macron said Hariri will be received "with the honours due a prime minister" even though he has announced his resignation.

Lebanese president Michel Aoun accused Saudi Arabia of detaining him.

Saudi officials denied the reports, adding that Mr Hariri was an ally. But they railed against Iran-backed Hezbollah, accusing the two of meddling in the region's affairs and backing anti-Saudi rebels in Yemen.

The resignation by Saudi-aligned Hariri raised concerns in a region already beset by conflict. Many feared Lebanon's delicate sectarian-based political system could be easily upended if the county is dragged into a battle for regional supremacy between Saudi Arabia and Iran.

On Friday, Saudi Arabia's foreign minister said there will be no stability in Lebanon unless the militant group Hezbollah disarms. "This is what we hope," Adel al-Jubeir said at a press conference in Madrid with his Spanish counterpart.

It was the second day in a row that the Saudi minister railed against Hezbollah. On Thursday, he called the group a "first-class terrorist organisation" that should lay down its arms and respect Lebanon's sovereignty. Saudi Arabia has already asked its nationals to leave Lebanon.

The Arab League is due to hold a meeting on Sunday in Cairo at Saudi Arabia's urging where the Lebanon crisis and Iran's role in the region are expected to be discussed. Many fear more Saudi punitive actions against Lebanon may be planned.